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25 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
what is the difference between chronic and acute SD on palpation
pale, fibrotic, cool, flaccid, dry, dull ache, gnawing VS boggy, spongy, hot, moist, stabbing, sharp pain throbbing
point to which to patient can actively move
physiologic barrier (not the anatomic barrier)
the barrier that exists before getting to the physiological barrier
restrictive barrier due to pathology
fryettes.... related R/SB in each
type 1... opposite, type II .... same side
what plane divides the body through the spine
sagittal
a form of isotonic contraction where the m. lengthens from an external force
eccentric contraction
isolytic contraction example
arm wrestle, forcing a m. to lengthen while its contracting
when is a direct tx not recommended
elderly, acute pains, hospitalized/ill pt, acute neck injuries esp
when are lymphatic techniques not recommended
advanced cancer pt
who gets short intervals between tx
peds, acute injuries
who get tx with long intervals between each tx
elderly and really sick/chronic pt
in what cases would you not start centrally on the body for your tx
acute cases may require peripheral tx to access the central area
you pt comes in with OA SD, tender shoulder, and lower rib pain, what do you tx first
(you could actually start with Cranial to calm the pt before tx) but the OA first- it is most central, then the ribs then the shoulder
you are doing all the work to tx
passive!!!!
maverick pt
non responsive tender point in counterstrain
the body is moved to a neutral position in all three planes of the body part, least joint and tissue tension, then activating force applied (torsion or compression), then the body is moved further and held for 3-4 seconds
facilitated positional release
used for superficial muscles and intervertebral muscles
FPR (facilitated positional release)
why can Myofascial releases be both passive and active tx
the pt can provide a force (ie: exhale and inhale)
Dr. Lawrence Jones
Counterstrain
Dr. Stanley Schiowitz
FPR
Dr. AT Still
Myofascial release, HVLA
Dr. Fred S. Mitchel
ME
what is the difference between post isometric relaxation and reciprocal relaxation
post iso - contracts the actual m. that is causing the restriction and reciprocal relaxation contrast the antagonistic m. (muscle energy technique)
pt presents with thoracic pain, the musculature around it is flaccid, pale, scaly, pimples - what is the condition categorized as
chronic
pt comes in with sacral pain, where do you start tx?
lumbar spine